This play is one of three sequential, self-contained plays which tell the story of some of the main actors in the drama of Russian radical opposition in the years pivoted on the European revolutions of 1848. The trilogy spans the early 1830s and the late 1860s.
La Côte d'UtopieSéries
Cette trilogie dépeint de manière dramatique le climat intellectuel et politique tumultueux de la Russie durant la période charnière s'étendant du début des années 1830 à la fin des années 1860. Elle suit les vies et les luttes idéologiques de figures clés au cœur du mouvement d'opposition radicale, particulièrement autour des révolutions européennes de 1848. Les œuvres explorent des questions profondes de liberté, d'identité et du rôle de l'individu dans la société. Elles offrent une exploration captivante de la formation de l'intelligentsia russe moderne.




Ordre de lecture recommandé
- 1
- 2
The coast of Utopia 2. Shipwreck
- 96pages
- 4 heures de lecture
and it was here, in the intoxicating anticipation and the dashed hopes of the 1848 revolution - when the loss of his political illusions were overshadowed by a series of personal calamities - that Herzen found his greatness, seeking the way forward for Russia, the just society and the good life.
Set against the backdrop of Tsarist autocracy, this trilogy delves into the lives of influential figures like anarchist Michael Bakunin and writer Ivan Turgenev, who embody the Russian intelligentsia. The narrative weaves themes of politics, love, and betrayal, focusing on Alexander Herzen, the first self-proclaimed socialist in Russia. Stoppard intricately explores the tensions between romantic anarchy, utopian ideals, and the quest for political freedom, capturing the fervor of a generation of revolutionaries striving for change.
The Coast of Utopia Trilogy
- 288pages
- 11 heures de lecture
The Coast of Utopia is an epic but also intimate drama of romantics and revolutionaries in an age of emperors. The three sequential, self-contained plays, Voyage, Shipwreck and Salvage, span the lives and loves of a group of Russian friends at home and abroad in the tumultuous years between 1833 and 1866.